
3.3 quake last night off the Cornish coast.

I just came across this blog post…. from The Hike Guy…. He has done something really amazing and I am inspired…
Here is what he has to say about it… and below are some of the images.
” ….I was laid off from my job of six years and decided to hike as much as I could of the 2,650-mile Pacific Crest Trail (PCT). The journey started at the Mexican border near Campo, California, through the harsh deserts of eastern California, into the wilds of the Sierra Nevadas, and through the thick forests of Northern California. 159 days later, my life-changing journey came to an end in early October after hiking nearly 1,700 miles of the trail. I came home with a strong appreciation for life and nature, a thinner waistline, and over 850 pages of journals!”


Time to get going on my own journals….
I have just read Alec Soth’s blog about marrying a photographer, and was trying to relate it to my own family situation…. How does Ellie feel about being married to me? In many ways I am not a very demanding photographer, most of my work is made in my own surroundings, with the occasional trip further afield.
Recently I have involved her in my work. During her pregnancy I decided to make a study of my life, by looking at my surroundings, and my wife.

I guess, as Soth has done, it is only by looking at the point of view of the partner/wife that we can really see how it is…. Perhaps it is a particularly masculine thing to want to go wandering. Are there some husbands out there who could share their point of view.
My own situation is also interesting, with Ellie having no interest in art or photography, my work becomes a solitary practice. That is not to say there is not support, it is amazing to see Ellie sitting waiting for me to make a picture, or with the work above, keep standing around whilst I photograph her.
With the arrival of Elijah, I am hoping to one day have another photographer on my side, but perhaps he’ll end up reading classics like his mum….
Below is Soth’s post…
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In response to a recent post, I received an email from Cait who wrote:
“Like you, my partner shoots with a large format camera and makes treks around the country (and sometimes the world) for his work. He plans to keep this up for the long term. As we plan for our future, marriage and babies included, I can’t help but think about the challenges our partnership and family will face under somewhat fleeting and unpredictable circumstances. I would love to learn about you and your wife’s perspectives on this subject and/or be directed to any personal accounts or resources that you know of on the work-life balance of a photographic family.”

Kerstin Adams preparing a meal (1972) Robert Adams photographing (1984).
In thinking about how to reply to this, I first turned to Robert Adams. As regular readers know, I’ve been immersing myself in his work lately. In the new Adams retrospective book, The Place We Live, there is an essay by Jock Reynolds entitled ‘Taken Together’ on the importance of Kerstin Adams in Robert’s life and work. Reynolds paints a fairly remarkable picture of marital harmony:
“Robert began to suspect that he wanted to abandon teaching and become a photographer. Kerstin was characteristically encouraging, and when her employment schedule allowed it, she became his partner in the field. He did most of the driving and she cooked (on a little stove they called “Mother Svea”); at dusk he loaded film holders inside a homemade dark box in the back of their panel truck while she brushed away mosquitoes; in small towns she kept up diversionary conversations with curious onlookers so that he could compose upside down on the view camera’s ground glass; and each day they enjoyed together the sweep of the land and sky, and the privilege of being there.”
As is often the case when I think about Adams, I’m simultaneously impressed and discomfited. When I read about his life I feel like a carnivore reading the menu at a vegan restaurant.
So instead I turn to fellow carnivore Lee Friedlander and his wife Maria (I can’t imagine Adams eating peanut butter, tuna and cheese whiz on crackers!). Nobody has written more honestly about being the spouse of a photographer than Maria Friedlander.

Lee & Maria Friedlander 1968, 1997
On my old blog, I once quoted her powerful forward to a William Gedney book. Recently I came across Maria Friedlander’s introduction to her husband’s book Family:
“What is this Family Book? Is it our own family album? Is it our pictorial biography? Does this book tell us whether we are, to paraphrase Tolstoy in Anna Karenina, one of those happy families that are all alike or an unhappy family that is unhappy in its own way?”
She later writes:
“A book of pictures doesn’t tell the whole story, so as a biography this one is incomplete. There are no photographs of arguments and disagreements, of the times when we were rude, impatient, and insensitive parents, of frustration, of anger strong enough to consider dissolving the marriage. Lee’s camera couldn’t record our family dysfunctions. There are no photographs of Anna, Tom and Giancarlo during the three years in which they felt it would be better if they didn’t see us, and certainly no photographs of how Lee and I felt during that time. Tolstoy was right – when we’ve been an unhappy family we have been unhappy in our own way.”
Getting back to Cait and her concerns about marrying a photographer, I don’t think there is a good answer. Mixing marriage, kids, travel and artmaking is extremely challenging. It will sometimes be unhappy. “The challenge for artists is just as it is for everyone,” Robert Adams once said to a group of college students, “to face facts and somehow come up with a yes, to try for alchemy.”

Looking forward to seeing more of this…
‘Dinner for two, for one’
Collaborative series by Sophie Millis & Matt Warder
So, a new year…. and many things are different from the beginning of 2011…. Most significantly is the presence of Eli in our lives. And his presence meant that instead of getting worried about what to do as young crazy people for New Years Eve, we had dinner with some other new parent friends, played Wii skiing…. and watched a bit of Jools Holland….
The video above is not from this years Hootenany, but from 1996, when I was a mere whippersnapper…. But is has the energy that I will be taking into 2012…. And as Steverecently said… We love him because he is Ben Folds…
While the minimum number of bikes one should own is three, the correct number isn+1, wherenis the number of bikes currently owned. This equation may also be re-written ass-1, wheresis the number of bikes owned that would result in separation from your partner.from Velominati’s Rules
so, still no baby yet, currently 5 days late…. Which means filling my time that should have been filled with nappies with other things.
One of these things has been a visit down to St Ives to catch the new show at Tate. There is a really lovely mix of abstract painting, with too much to go into here (look here for more)…. One thing that really stood out was the piece by Bernard Frize. The work, made with the skin from household paint tins, is really beautiful.
Just a quick reminder guys, it is the Plymouth Photobook Fair on Saturday 26th of November.
There are going to some great talks and stalls from some major publishers and magazines.
We really want to take as many of your books and zines as possible so please email us about taking them along.
untitledfalmouth@gmail.com
Also we made a Facebook event for the fair, just another way that you can get your work to us.

The Bookfair is starting to come together, with lots of interesting people coming down. We are now looking for anyone with some work in progress who may want to pop it up on a wall.

I feel the need to buy this axe…. I already have 2…. but there is something in the quality, and design. They also make many other nice things.
have a look here: best made company
— Steve Jobs, 2005
over the last couple of months I have been closely following the progress of my friend and colleague Lizzie as she undertakes a residency in rural Woodstock in America. Whilst there the aim is to produce a new publication based on work that has been developing over a number of years…..
By following her blog (click) I have been able to see all of the wonderful things she has been getting up to….. but enough is enough..
The latest entry sees her heading off into the woods with a shotgun.

This does not mean that she has finally lost patience with the wildlife….
but rather, is using this template, made by the exciting sounding Woody, to create a new page…

The resulting image looking something like this.

So please Lizzie, stop having so much fun, and come home to all of the paperwork that the rest of us are engaged in….